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Salts - EdexcelSolubility rules

Soluble salts can be made by reacting acids with soluble or insoluble reactants. Titration must be used if the reactants are soluble. Insoluble salts are made by precipitation reactions.

Part of Chemistry (Single Science)Chemical changes

Solubility rules

Solubility

A substance's is a measure of the maximum that will dissolve in a given volume of , at a particular temperature. Substances that are very have high solubilities. Substances that are or sparingly soluble (almost none dissolves) have low solubilities.

Solubility in water

The table summarises whether common are soluble or insoluble in water.

SolubleInsoluble
All common sodium, potassium and ammonium salts
All nitrates
Most common chloridesSilver chloride, lead chloride
Most common sulfatesLead sulfate, barium sulfate, calcium sulfate
Sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, ammonium carbonateMost common carbonates
Sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, ammonium hydroxideMost common hydroxides
SolubleAll common sodium, potassium and ammonium salts
Insoluble
SolubleAll nitrates
Insoluble
SolubleMost common chlorides
InsolubleSilver chloride, lead chloride
SolubleMost common sulfates
InsolubleLead sulfate, barium sulfate, calcium sulfate
SolubleSodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, ammonium carbonate
InsolubleMost common carbonates
SolubleSodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, ammonium hydroxide
InsolubleMost common hydroxides

The top two rows explain why so many used in the laboratory are sodium or potassium or nitrates.

Precipitates

A is an insoluble that forms when two solutions are mixed and react together. The reaction that produces a precipitate is called a .

For example, a precipitate of lead iodide forms when potassium iodide solution and lead nitrate solution are mixed:

potassium iodide + lead nitrate 鈫 potassium nitrate + lead iodide

2KI(aq) + Pb(NO3)2(aq) 鈫 2KNO3(aq) + PbI2(s)

Notice how important are in the for precipitation reactions. Without the (s) for solid, it would not be obvious that PbI2 (lead iodide) was the precipitate.

A yellow precipitate of lead iodide.
Image caption,
A yellow precipitate of lead iodide

Predicting precipitates

The formation of a precipitate, when two solutions are mixed, can be predicted using the solubility rules in the table:

  • if the products meet the 'soluble' rules in the left hand column, no precipitate will form
  • if at least one product meets the 'insoluble' rule in the right hand column, a precipitate will form

Worked example

Silver nitrate solution is mixed with sodium chloride solution. Predict whether a precipitate forms and name any precipitate.

Worked example answer

A precipitate of silver chloride will form.

Question

Potassium sulfate solution is mixed with barium chloride solution. Predict whether a precipitate forms, and name any precipitate.